ATS-1

ATS-1

This is a section of an ATS-1 satellite image showing Hurricane Monica, from September 2, 1971 at 0008z, which originated within the National Hurricane Center archive in Coral Gables, Florida
Mission type Weather Satellite
COSPAR ID 1966-110A[1]
Start of mission
Launch date December 7, 1966, 02:12:01 (1966-12-07UTC02:12:01Z) UTC
Rocket Atlas SLV-3 Agena-D
Launch site Cape Canaveral LC-12
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric

ATS-1 (Applications Technology Satellite) was the first experimental equatorial synchronous satellite.[2] Though intended as a communications satellite rather than as a weather satellite, it carried the Spin Scan Cloud Camera developed by Verner E. Suomi and Robert Parent at the University of Wisconsin. After entering a geostationary orbit at 23,000 mi (37,000 km) above Earth, initially in orbit over Ecuador, it transmitted weather images from the Western Hemisphere, as well as other data, to ground stations, including well as video feeds for television broadcasting. "For the first time," historians would note later, "rapid-imaging of nearly an entire hemisphere was possible. We could watch, fascinated, as storm systems developed and moved and were captured in a time series of images. Today such images are an indispensable part of weather analysis and forecasting." [3]

It was the first satellite to use frequency-division multiple access which accepted multiple independent signals and downlinked them in a single carrier. The spacecraft measured 56 inches (1,400 mm) in diameter, 57 inches (1,400 mm) high and weighed 750 lb (340 kg).[4]

The ATS-1 satellite was used during the 1967 international television broadcast Our World, providing a link between the United States and Australia during the program.

The ATS-1 would remain operational for more than 18 years, until April, 1985.[5]

References

  1. NASA - NSSDC - Spacecraft - Details
  2. Su-Yin Tan, Meteorological Satellite Systems (Springer Science & Business Media, 2013) p44
  3. Stanley Q. Kidder and Thomas H. Vonder Haar, Satellite Meteorology: An Introduction (Gulf Professional Publishing, 1995) p7
  4. Missions - ATS - NASA Science
  5. Michel Capderou, Handbook of Satellite Orbits: From Kepler to GPS (Springer Science & Business, 2014) p279


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.